When including another module (or library) via the require or use statements,
it is best to identify the module (or library) using a bareword rather than an explicit path.
This is because paths are usually not portable from one machine to another.
Also,
Perl automatically assumes that the filename ends in '.pm' when the library is expressed as a bareword.
So as a side-effect,
this Policy encourages people to write '*.pm' modules instead of the old-school '*.pl' libraries.

This Policy is a replacement for ProhibitRequireStatements, which completely banned the use of require for the sake of eliminating the old '*.pl' libraries from Perl4. Upon further consideration, I realized that require is quite useful and necessary to enable run-time loading. Thus, RequireBarewordIncludes does allow you to use require, but still encourages you to write '*.pm' modules.

Sometimes, you may want to load modules at run-time, but you don't know at design-time exactly which module you will need to load (Perl::Critic is an example of this). In that case, just attach the '## no critic' annotation like so: